'That's All Folks!' Warner Bros. Artwork Arrives In Connecticut
âThatâs All Folks!â Warner Bros. Artwork Arrives In Connecticut
By Shannon Hicks
BRIDGEPORT â For nearly 40 years, the Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio produced animated shorts, or cartoons, that entertained audiences of all ages. Warner Bros. opened its cartoon studio in 1930, but the theatrical division closed its doors in 1969.
While the studio may have stopped producing new shorts, the entertainment value of the cartoons with characters like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd have not faded in the decades since their release. In fact, 60 years after Bugs Bunny was introduced in a 1938 cartoon called âPorkyâs Hare Hunt,â the character continues to win major national popularity polls. The phrase âThatâs All Folks!â and the familiar red logo that surrounds Porky Pig as he stutters through those three words are etched into nearly every Americanâs memory, regardless of age.
Originally produced for screening in theatres, the studioâs cartoons are now shown on television hundreds of times daily around the world.
This month, The Barnum Museum has opened an exhibition called âThatâs All Folks! Bugs Bunny and Friends of Warner Bros. Cartoons.â The traveling exhibition is slated for a three-month visit at the landmark institution in downtown Bridgeport.
The exhibition was curated and incepted ten years ago by Steve Schneider, the author of Thatâs All Folks! The Art of Warner Bros. Animation. When the show debuted at the Museum of Modern Art in the late 1980s, it was the first time a cartoon-themed exhibition was ever developed, according to The Barnum Museumâs new curator, Kathleen Maher. The show has consistently received critical acclaim.
âI think this is going to be a very popular show,â Ms Maher said last week, the day before the exhibitâs October 2 public opening. âI donât think anyone will step through these doors and not identify with something. It really transcends age. Itâs a lot of fun.â
Through January 8, visitors can view original production artwork from the Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio in the form of over 160 drawings, paintings, celluloids and promotion pieces that were created between 1930 through the early 1960s.
âThatâs All Folks!â is arranged into seven sections, each with artwork and interpretive text panels. The exhibition opens with âThe History of Warner Bros.,â which offers a general introduction to the world of the Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio and its special contributions to the history of animation and American culture.
Warner Bros. cartoons are seen today, along with Disney Studios productions and similar higher-quality animated cartoons, as monuments to creativity.
In the summer of 1929, former Disney animator Hugh Harman and Rudolf Isling came up with a groundbreaking idea and presented it to Leon Schlesinger, of Pacific Art & Title (which later became Warner Bros.) The team used a character named Bosko â a male monkey who wore pants and a small rounded-top hat â to sell the idea of a cartoon series that would compete with Disneyâs Mickey Mouse and the studioâs âSilly Symphonies.â
The team finished its first cartoon, âBosko The Talk-Ink Kid,â by the end of 1929. Although it was never released by the studio, the cartoon is believed to be the first talking animated cartoon (remember, Disneyâs âSteamboat Willieâ was synchronized music and sound effects only). Schlesinger backed the team with a salary of $50 a week, and the ongoing cartoon war between the two studios was started.
In May 1930, the Harman-Isling team had its first cartoon release. âSinkinâ in the Bathtubâ partnered Bosko with his pal Honey, a female monkey. More cartoons and new characters followed, with Goopy Gear, Foxy, Piggy, Buddy and Cookie among them, but it was not until the legendary director and animator Fred âTexâ Avery joined Warner Bros. in 1935 that the studio hit its stride.
âHe was really the creator, for Warner Bros., of the most significant characters,â Ms Maher pointed out. Avery led a pool of animators who brought life to Porky Pig, Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny, among other characters.
That same year, Warner Bros. introduced its first big character: Porky Pig. Porky was the collaboration of Avery and Bob (âWobert Cwampettâ) Clampett. The two worked in a dilapidated little building at the back of Warner Bros.â Hollywood lot that had been dubbed âTermite Terrace.â While the outside of the building may not have been impressive, the work and creativity that was going on inside its walls put the fledgling cartoon studio under the brightest spotlight the world of animation art has ever seen.
Along with Avery, who directed 57 cartoons during his five-year tenure with Warner Bros., and Bob Clampett (who actually designed the first Mickey Mouse doll for Walt Disney while still a teenager, before joining the Warner Bros. team as an animator in 1935), who animated the first âMerrie Melodiesâ ever made, the studio had four additional directors who have each achieved their own legendary status through history.
Isador âFrizâ Freleng produced and directed over 300 cartoons during his 33-year career at Warner Bros. Robert McKimson joined the studio in 1946. He was eventually promoted to senior director and before he retired from Warner Bros. in 1969 was responsible for the direction of over 175 cartoons. Frank âTish Tashâ Tashlin handled direction for 33 cartoons, about one-third of which were Porky Pig adventures.
Chuck Jones, the same man who would later create The Grinch and The Lorax (among many others) for Dr Seuss, joined Warner Bros. in 1936 as an animator. He was soon assigned to Tex Averyâs unit, and later became the studioâs sixth director.
Jones directed the cartoon âWhatâs Opera, Doc?â in 1957. In the piece, Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd go through the motions of a bittersweet opera with some of the most lavish background and sound work ever produced by the studio. Thirty-five years after it was released, Jonesâ cartoon was inducted into the National Film Registry in December 1992 for being âamong the most culturally, historically or aesthetically significant films of our time.â
It is important to note here that while the directors at Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio were the ones who received the majority of the credit for each cartoon, an entire pool of animators, sound effects people (both with character voices and background noises), and musical directors all contributed to a single cartoon. During the early days of cartoons, when every cel was produced by hand, a single six or seven-minute cartoon would be in production from several months to a year, with dozens of artists working on different stages of the process.
A section in the exhibition called âHow Cartoons Were Made At Warner Bros.â offers a rare inside look at what was produced at Termite Terrace. Visitors can see original story sketches, model sheets, printed model sheets, character layout drawings, an exposure sheet, animation drawings, backgrounds, cel transfers and promotional drawings.
âAnimation art is amazingly complex,â Ms Maher commented last week. The curator admitted that after seeing the artifacts that were being put into the new exhibition last week, she went home and watched a few âMerrie Melodiesâ and âLooney Tunesâ releases again for the first time in years. The experience, she said, gave her a brand-new appreciation for the animators and their skills.
âThese, to me, really stand as a tribute to animation genius,â she said.
Never intended for public display, the artwork reveals the talent and ingenuity that went into producing the finished films â a library of thousands that were in fact created for audiences of all ages.
Cartoons have always been generally accepted as entertainment for children. It has only been within the past decade, with the introduction of such mainstream fare as South Park, The Simpsons and King of the Hill, that cartoons aimed at an adult audience have become more prevalent.
When the animators at Warner Bros. were first creating their âMerrie Melodiesâ and âLooney Tunesâ originals, the adult humor was a little more subtle. Hidden innuendoes in dialogue, characterization and even cartoon titles were not as obvious as what todayâs animation projects rely on for their laughs.
Some of the Warner Bros.â toonsâ dialogue have references to happenings of the times when they were first produced, and even story lines seem completely incorrect by todayâs standards (1943âs âCoal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs,â which retold the childrenâs fairy tale Snow White with its main character in blackface, would never be allowed past any censorsâ board today). But most of Warner Bros.â punchlines continue to bring laughs from all ages today.
Disney Studios releases were âchild-likeâ in their humor, said Ms Maher, while Warner Bros. creators used more âhard core, in your face humor that we still love today.â
Perhaps because they were seen as simply childrenâs entertainment, the brilliance of Warner Bros. cartoons was not recognized by critics and writers or the Academy of Arts & Sciences for nearly a decade after the introduction of âMerrie Melodiesâ and âLooney Tunesâ became a regular release in movie theatres.
But once Manny Farber opened the door in 1943, when he wrote in The New Republic, âThe surprising facts about them are that the good ones are masterpieces...,â the rest of Warner Bros.â accolades began to roll into place. By 1958, the studio had been honored with five Emmy Awards for its cartoons, four of which were directed by Friz Freling. âTweety Pieâ (1947), âFor Scent-imental Reasonsâ (1949, directed by Chuck Jones), âSpeedy Gonzalesâ (1955), âBirds Anonymousâ (1957) and âKnighty Knight Bugsâ (1958) each earned an Emmy for the studio; another 21 cartoons were nominated between 1932 and 1963.
The Barnum exhibition continues with sections devoted to âPorky Pig and Daffy Duck,â the studioâs first major cartoon creations; âBugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd,â which offers an in-depth look at the studioâs most famous creation and his eternally frustrated foil; and âEternal Adversariesâ (featuring Tweety Pie and Sylvester, and The Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote). The section âOther Charactersâ offers visitors a look at some of the studioâs lesser-known but still adored characters, among Sniffles, Miss Prissy, Playboy Penguin, Henery Hawk and Pepe Le Pew.
Finally, the âTwo Classic Cartoonsâ section presents finished cartoons shown on video screens in the museumâs brand-new special exhibitions wing. The gallery space being used for âThatâs All Folks!â is an extension of the museumâs Special Exhibitions Wing. Formerly classroom space and additional storage area, the new 2,000 square foot gallery will now be used for additional exhibitions.
The Warner Bros. Cartoon Studio may have closed in 1969, but television rediscovered the cartoons during the mid 1970s and have been screening them ever since. Generations of children have grown up laughing with the antics of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Bosko, and they have continued to laugh at the cartoons as they grow up and understand some of the more adult punchlines.
Even now, says Kathleen Maher, Bugs Bunny and The Road Runner are still the most popular and identifiable characters ever created by any studio, beating even all the Disney and Muppets characters.
âNo other studio has developed such a longstanding list of characters,â Ms Maher said. âEveryone has their favorite, and whatâs amazing is that some of these are characters and their sayings are still with us today.â